It is rash business scuttling your
own ship. Now as I am in a way a practical person,
which is, I take it, a diminutive state of hard-headedness,
any detraction against hard-headedness must appear
as leveled against myself. Gimlet in hand, deep
down amidships, it would look as if I were squatted
and set on my own destruction.
But by hard-headed persons I mean
those beyond the ordinary, those so far gone that
a pin-prick through the skull would yield not so much
as a drop of ooze; persons whose brain convolutions
did they appear in fright at the aperture on the insertion
of the pin like a head at a window when
there is a fire on the street would betray
themselves as but a kind of cordage. Such hard-headedness,
you will admit, is of a tougher substance than that
which may beset any of us on an occasion at the price
of meat, or on the recurrent obligations of the too-constant
moon.
I am reasonably free from colds.
I do not fret myself into a congestion if a breath
comes at me from an open window; or if a swirl of wind
puts its cold fingers down my neck do I lift my collar.
Yet the presence of a thoroughly hard-headed person
provokes a sneeze. There is a chilly vapor off
him a swampish miasma that puts
me in a snuffling state, beyond poultice and mustard
footbaths. No matter how I huddle to the fire,
my thoughts will congeal and my purpose cramp and
stiffen. My conceit too will be but a shriveled
bladder.
Several years ago I knew a man of
extreme hard-headedness. As I recall, I was afflicted
at the time indeed, the malady co-existed
with his acquaintance with a sorry catarrh
of the nasal passages. I can remember still the
clearings and snufflings that obtruded in my conversation.
For two winters my complaint was beyond the cunning
of the doctors. Despite local applications and
such pills as they thought fit to administer, still
did the snuffling continue. Then on a sudden my
friend left town. Consequent to which and to
the amazement of the profession, the springs of my
disease dried up. As this happened at the beginning
of the warm days of summer, I am loath to lay my cure
entirely to his withdrawal, yet there was a nice jointry
of time. My acquaintance thereafter dropped to
an infrequent, statistical letter, against which I
have in time proofed myself. But the catarrh
has ceased except when some faint thought echoes from
the past, at which again, as in the older days, I am
forced to blow a passage in the channel for verbal
navigation.
This man’s interest in life
was oil. It oozed from the ventages of his
talk. If he looked on the map of this fair world,
with its mountains like caterpillars dozing on the
page for so do maps present themselves to my fancy he would see merely the
blueprint and huge specification of oil production
and consumption. The dotted cities would suggest
no more than agencies in its distribution, and they
would be pegged in many colors as is the
custom of our business efficiency by way
of base symbolism of their rank and pretense; the
wide oceans themselves would be merely courses for
his tank ships to bustle on and leave a greasy trail.
Really, contrary to my own experience and sudden cure,
one might think that such an oleaginous stream of
talk, if directed in atomizer fashion against the
nostrils of the listener, would serve as a healing
emulsion for the complaint I then suffered with.
Be these things as they may, what
I can actually vouch for is that when this fellow
had set himself and opened a volley of facts on me,
I was shamed to silence. There was a spaciousness,
a planetary sweep and glittering breadth that shriveled
me. The commodity which I dispensed was but used
around the corner, with a key turned upon it at the
shadowy end of day against its intrusion on the night.
But his oil, all day long and all night too, was swishing
in its tanks on the course to Zanzibar. And all
the fretted activity of the earth was tributary to
his purpose. How like an untrimmed smoky night-candle
did my ambition burn! If I chanced to think in
thousands it was a strain upon me. My cerebrum
must have throbbed itself to pieces upon the addition
of another cypher. But he marshaled his legions
and led them up and down, until it dazed me. I
was no better than some cobbler with a fiddle, crooked
and intent to the twanging of his E string, while
the great Napoleon thundered by.
The secret channels of the earth and
the fullness thereof made a joyful gurgle in his thoughts.
And if he ever wandered in the country and ever saw
a primrose on the river’s brim which
I consider unlikely, his attention being engaged at
the moment on figuring the cost of oil barrels, with
special consideration for the price of bungs if
this man ever did see a primrose, would it have been
a yellow primrose to him and nothing more? Bless
your dear eyes, it would have been a compound of by-products parafine,
wax-candles, cup-grease, lamp-black, beeswax and peppermint
drops not to mention its proper distillation
into such rare odors as might be sold at so much a
bottle to jobbers, and a set price at retail, with
best legal talent to avoid the Sherman Act.
This man has lived my spleen
rises at the thought in many of the capitals
of Europe. For six months at a time he has walked
around one end of the Louvre on his way home at night
without once putting his head inside. Indeed,
it is probable he hasn’t noticed the building,
or if he has, thinks it is an arsenal. Now in
all humility, and unbuttoned, as it were, for a spanking
by whomsoever shall wish to give it, I must confess
that I myself have no great love for the Louvre, regarding
it somewhat as an endurance test for tired tourists,
a kind of blow-in-the-nozzle-and-watch-the-dial-mount-up
contrivance, as at a country fair. And so I am
not sure but that the band playing in the gardens
is a better amusement for a bright afternoon, and that
a nursemaid in uniform with her children bare-legged
tots with fingers in the sand that such
sight is more worthy of respect than a dead Duchess
painted on the wall. It is but a ritualistic obeisance
I have paid the gods inside. My finer reverence
has been for benches in the sun and the vagabondage
of a bus-top.
If ever my friend gets to heaven it
will be but another point for exportation. How
closely he will listen for any squeaking of the Pearly
Gates, with a nostrum ready for their dry complaint!
When he is once through and safe (the other pilgrims
still coming up the hill for heaven, I’m
sure, will be set on some wind-swept ridge, with purple
distance in the valleys ) how he will put
his ear against the hinge for nice diagnosis as to
the weight of oil that will give best result!
How he will wink upon the gateman that he write his
order large!
Reader, I have sent you off upon a
wrong direction. I have twisted the wooden finger
at the crossroads. The man of oil does not exist.
He is a piece of fiction with which to point a moral.
Pig-iron or cotton-cloth would have served as well;
anything, in fact, whereon, by too close squinting,
one may blunt his sight.
We have all observed a growing tendency
in many persons to put, as it were, electric lights
in all the corners and attics of their brains, until
it is too much a rarity to find any one who will admit
a twilight in his whole establishment. This is
carrying mental housekeeping too far. I will
confess that I prefer a light at the foot of the back
stairs, where the steps are narrow at the turn, for
Annie is precious to us. I will confess, also,
that it is well to have a switch in the kitchen to
throw light in the basement, on the chance that the
wood-box may get empty before the evening has spent
itself. There is comfort, too, in not being forced
to go darkling to bed, like Childe Roland to the tower,
but to put out the light from the floor above.
But we are carrying this business too far in mental
concerns. Here is properly a place for a rare
twilight. It is not well that a man should always
flare himself like a lighted ballroom.
Much of our best mental stuff if
you exclude the harsher grindings of our business
hours fades in too coarse a light.
’Tis a brocade that for best preservation must
not be hung always in the sun. There must be regions
in you unguessed at cornered and shadowed
places recesses to be shown at peep of
finger width, yielding only to the knock of fancy,
dim sequesterings tucked obscurely from the noises
of the world, where one must be taken by the hand
and led dusky closets beyond the common
use. It is in such places your finger
on your lips and your feet a-tiptoe on the stairs that
you will hide away from baser uses the stowage of moonlight
stuff and such other gaseous and delightful foolery
as may lie in your inheritance.